Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine, in a global perspective, the oil, gold, US dollar and stock prices interdependencies and to identify instantaneously direct and indirect linkages among them. Design/methodology/approach A methodology based on simultaneous equations system was used to identify direct and indirect linkages for the period 1995-2015. The authors try initially to find theoretical answers to main question of the study by discussing causal bilateral relationships while focusing on multilateral interactions. Findings The results show significant interactions between all markets. The authors found a negative relation between oil and stock prices but oil price is significantly and positively affected by gold and USD. Oil price is also affected by oil futures prices and by Chinese oil gross imports. Gold rate is concerned by changes in oil, USD and stock markets. The US dollar is negatively affected by stock market and significantly by oil and gold price. Indirect effects always exist which confirm the presence of global interdependencies and involve the financialization process of commodity markets. Originality/value Motivation of this research paper is the substantial implications of price movements on real economy and financial markets. Understanding that co-movement has great value for investors, policy makers and portfolio managers. This paper differs from previous studies in several aspects. First, most of the research papers focus on bilateral linkages solely, while the authors’ investigation was implemented on all the four markets simultaneously. Second, the study was developed in a global framework using international data. The global analysis allows avoiding country specific effects.

Highlights

  • The sustained rise in interdependence of global markets along with the international financial integration have accelerated the financialization process of commodity markets (Tang and Xiong, 2012) and led stock and foreign exchange markets to be more sensitive to commodity prices.the unusual breaking events and the shortage of liquid financial assets make investors questioning their worldview about market risk and triggered a particular interest in precious metals and energy markets (Caballero et al, 2008)

  • We found that oil price is significantly affected by stock markets, gold and trade-weighted USD exchange rate

  • Gold price is concerned by changes in oil, USD and stock markets but slightly depends on US oil imports and default premium

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Summary

Introduction

The sustained rise in interdependence of global markets along with the international financial integration have accelerated the financialization process of commodity markets (Tang and Xiong, 2012) and led stock and foreign exchange (hereafter forex) markets to be more sensitive to commodity prices.the unusual breaking events and the shortage of liquid financial assets make investors questioning their worldview about market risk and triggered a particular interest in precious metals and energy markets (Caballero et al, 2008). The sustained rise in interdependence of global markets along with the international financial integration have accelerated the financialization process of commodity markets (Tang and Xiong, 2012) and led stock and foreign exchange (hereafter forex) markets to be more sensitive to commodity prices. Commodity markets have attracted international investor’s attention as “safe haven” and as a alternative investment with greater sense of certainty during turmoil periods (Baur and McDermott, 2010). European Journal of Management and Business Economics Vol 26 No 3, 2017 pp. Published in the European Journal of Management and Business Economics. The full terms of this licence may be seen at: http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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